Now, as Supervising Animator for The Fates and
the Thebans in Disney Feature Animation's current release, Hercules,
she has reached a place she has been working toward for 20 years. It seems
fitting that she should be acting in the Underworld: well suited to her
talents as a caricaturist and her strong New Yorker's individualism and
cynicism.

A CalArts FirstBeiman was fated to be taught by the colleagues of the Nine Old Men
at the California Institute of the Arts from 1975-1979. As Tom Sito has
described in his remembrance of the 1976-77 production of Raggedy Ann
and Andy (Animation Magazine, April/May, 1997) those years saw
the last productions of the old generation, and the first efforts of the
new.

Through a string of coincidences worthy of her weird sisters' invention,
Beiman was chosen to receive a scholarship to the inaugural class of the
Character Animation Program at CalArts. She had already been accepted at
New York University, but instead she went to California.

"I went to the right school," Beiman told me recently. "That
was an incredible course. You had Jack Hannah teaching Animation, Elmer
Plummer with Life Drawing, T. Hee teaching Caricature, Ken O'Connor doing
Layout. These are legendary people. One non-Disney person, Bill Moore,
was a design instructor at Chouinard Art Institute for 40 years. This turned
out to be the most important course of all, since everything else works
out of good design. I was very lucky to be there when they were all there.
There were two other girls in that first class but by the end of `76 I
was the only one left. I was the first to graduate in 1979. Since Jack
Zander had already hired me, I graduated three months ahead of the guys."

Nancy explains how this happened, "I was heading back to New York
[on a school break], and Jim Logan (who was at Dick Williams' studio in
Hollywood) told me to look up his old friend Jack Zander when I was in
New York." At Zander's Animation Parlour, the Art Director reluctantly
agreed to take a look at Beiman's student film. "He's looking at the
cat film and he goes, `Who did this?' `I did.' `You did this?' `Yes, sir.'
`Excuse me, I think Jack better have a look!'

"Zander looked at it for a minute and said, `I've seen enough! Get
over here! Sit down, draw me something!' Jack said later, `You were 21
years old, you looked 14, and no one had ever heard of Cal Arts!' She continues,
"No one had ever seen a student film with Disney style animation in
it. Jack wanted to be sure I wasn't faking it! I think I drew some little
sheep for him. And he said, `Get in my office, sit down! You wanna go back
to school? To Hell with school! Sit down, we'll pay you! Start working!'
But I said, `Mr. Zander, my parents will scream at me if I don't have that
diploma.' `Allright. Why don't you work for me this one week, and then
you come back in January, after you get it?' he suggested." There
were some phone calls to California, and "that's how all this foofraw
started. So I started working for Zander's in December of `78 and went
full time in March of `79."

Beiman is a traditionalist who has nevertheless broken ground for women
in unprecedented areas. As a result of her first job, she was the youngest
person and one of the few women ever to be initiated into the New York
Union (Motion Picture Screen Cartoonists Local 841) as an animator. Later,
she was to become a director in New York for Warner Bros. on their first
attempt to revive six minute theatrical shorts production after the demise
of Paramount's Famous Studios in the `60s. Even though this was 1991, there
were still few female animation directors in New York.

Taking up residence among the cliff dwellers of Manhattan, her preferred
habitat, she did well, becoming one of the principal animators for Zander's
commercial spots and The Gnomes television special. In 1982, she
left to pursue freelance opportunities which included her first Disney
assignment.

Dogs And Ducks"I've been working for Disney for a long time, but not necessarily
in [the] Animation [Division]. I started in `82. I was freelancing for
Rick Reinert Productions, which was subcontracting for Disney. I worked
on Winnie the Pooh and a Day for Eeyore, the original Disney Channel
station breaks, and a lot of educational stuff for Florida with Donald
Duck. In 1986, work started getting rather thin on the ground, and Dean
Yeagle and I formed Caged Beagle in an attempt to get commercial production
going again. It was the wrong time to start a studio in New York City,
though we did subcontract work from Warner Bros. on their Quackbusters
feature.

"I then went out to California and picked up work from Bill Melendez,
who was a wonderful, wonderful boss. I worked on a show called It's
the Girl in the Red Truck, Charlie Brown. It was a really elaborate
animation with live-action combination, with Snoopy's brother Spike. What
I loved about it was, Spike had never been animated before, and the directors
said, `Do what you like with him.' Spike doesn't talk, just like Snoopy.
So this was the first fully pantomimed character I had done. Boy, was he
fun! I mean, I had more fun on him than just about anything.

"In `88 everything died. So I saw a magazine article that said, `Don
Martin cartoons to be done in Germany.'" Nancy sent her reel, not
really expecting much, if any, response. "Then I get a long-distance
call, [a voice] with a heavy accent, that goes, `This is Gerhard Hahn,
from HahnFilm. Can you get on ze next plane? How many years can you stay?'
And I said, `Whoa, whoa, there. Here's what we'll do: why don't I come
over for thirty days to Berlin, and I'll work on your Don Martin commercial,
and we'll see if we like each other?'

"I made some very dear friends over there. The Don Martin job was
a really wild commercial for the Swedish election of 1988, where I worked
with some Danish animators and met Borge Ring. I found HahnFilm to be a
pleasant place in which to work. The Werner project we did was a
lot of fun. It was a feature, the most successful German film since 1945,
and the sequel [Werner, Eat My Dust] has broken that record. I mainly
did storyboard on Werner and also some animation. I went to Annecy
[Animation Festival] in `89, and was approached by the Spielberg people
[to work on An American Tail: Fievel Goes West]. I said to Gerhard
[Hahn] as he was just about to start full production, that I always wanted
to work in England, and this was about my only chance. So we parted on
very amicable terms.

Cats And Mice"[At Amblin in London] I was originally
hired as an animator, but I was a supervisor within six months. I was doing
a great deal of footage, and I'd asked for Miss Kitty, who was unassigned.
I got the promotion. Kitty, I thought, is one of my best assignments: she
was a great voice. Amy Irving did a sort of Mae West accent. Her dialogue
was a little crazy, so I suggested to Simon Wells, one of the directors,
that since she had scatterbrained dialogue maybe she should be scatterbrained
in her actions. This was enthusiastically accepted. So I had a lot of freedom
in her choreography.

"Then, instead of going onto the next feature, I went back to New
York to work for Greg Ford on a Bugs Bunny show that I would direct. So,
I tell people I change countries the way some people change socks! I've
always been a person who prefers to live where I want to live. You know,
I could have made more money going out to L.A., let's face it, in 1982,
when Rick Reinert offered to bring me out there. I hung on as long as I
could in New York, and then went to Europe, because I like to live in a
cosmopolitan city."

Beiman was piling up credits like trophy heads from jobs which were coming,
Hydra-like, from all directions. Nancy started her move West, like Fievel,
with her next job for Warner Bros.

Bugs in New York CityWarner Bros. opened a production studio in New York in 1989 in the
historic Film Center Building on Eighth Avenue in the Hell's Kitchen district.
Nancy's first directing assignment was to be a compilation program of 30
minutes' length titled Lunar Tunes.

About it, she says, "I tell people, saying you've done a compilation
picture is like saying you've had an illegitimate child! We had to take
the Martian cartoons of Chuck Jones and incorporate them into this new
stuff." Chuck Jones has always been one of Nancy's heroes. "I
do feel like I'm doing him a terrible disservice, so we did not have direct
hookups from old animation to the new. They are kept strictly separate.
The old footage is presented as evidence in a trial. And I've literally
put it on a motion picture screen, which is modeled on the old Art Deco
fixings that were in our studio. Plus, no one said the `old footage' had
to be animation! There's a montage sequence of which I'm still rather proud,
called `Know Your Neighbor,' where you have Marvin say, `Here's how Earth
creatures portray us!' And it's all these clips from Grade Z live-action
horror movies."

A feature of the recent (June 1997) Cartoon Network weekend of Bugs Bunny
cartoons was one which had never been seen before, called Blooper Bunny.
This was the second film made at the New York studio. Nancy recalls, "Blooper
Bunny was directed by Greg [Ford] and Terry [Lennon]. It had a very
elaborate computer animated background at the beginning of the film that
was done by the Kroyers [Bill and Sue]. [In New York] I animated Bugs and
Daffy matching to these computer backgrounds. Elmer [Fudd] was done by
Dean Yeagle; Yosemite Sam was done by Nelson Rhodes in New Mexico. So,
we actually had the scene worked on in three different cities. The film
was extremely amusing, it just aired this week. I would love to hear what
people thought of it. I would love to hear the reviews, because, of course,
we were very proud of it, and we were very happy that it aired."

Nancy knew that her time at Warners was limited. "Warner Bros. closed
the New York Studio in 1992. I was supposed to go back to Germany, but
Gerhard [Hahn] did not get financing for another feature. I wound up working
for the Phillips Sidewalk Company in L.A. with Gary Drucker and Rebecca
Newman on a now-dead system called CDI. CDI went at 10 frames per second,
but looked like full animation."

The Mouse in BurbankHowever, the CD-ROM system was to win
out in the marketplace and the divine hand of Disney plucked her from the
shady Underworld of soon-to-be-obsolescent CDI technology, to act Goofy
and eventually shoulder the labors of Hercules.The Goofy Movie
was produced by Disney Television, and was first released theatrically
to critical acclaim. "In 1993 I got a phone call from Disney Television
[in Burbank]. They said, `Would you like to work for us on The Goofy
Movie in France?' I said, `When do I leave?' They needed a Supervisor
[Supervising Animator] with experience who was very mobile and could live
in Paris for a year.

"I was Supervisor on Roxanne, the girl, and also did a lot of work
on Goofy and Pete. They gave me the opening scenes in Goofy's house, since
they wanted a `Jack Kinney-style' Goofy. They said, `He's a very sensitive
character later in the film, so we want to lead in with something where
the character's behaving like the Goofy the audience always knew.' So they
wanted me to do something goofy with Goofy. I remember director Kevin Lima
wanted him to dance the Mambo." When Nancy finished the animation,
she showed it to him. "I wanted this to be the stupidest Mambo ever
filmed! He said, `You won! That's right!'" Nancy continues, "The
choreography was like John Waters did it."

In 1994, Beiman continued working for Disney Television, this time in Burbank.
She was getting closer to features, and at last the word came down. "In
the beginning of `95, I was informed that John Musker and Ron Clements
had asked that I contact them at [Disney] Features. They said, `We would
like to know if you'd do The Fates for us (on Hercules).' They showed
me the Gerald Scarfe drawings, and some of designer Sue Nichols' work,
and I thought, `This is really exciting, very different.'

"You've got to realize, when you're brought
up doing what you call the traditional Disney style, Scarfe's designs can
look a little intimidating at first, but Gerald had worked in animation
before, so he would meet us halfway. If I said, `Gerald, she won't turn.
I need a back view,' he did it for me. And, I would combine the two designs,
I would interpolate the two, making a happy medium. I did every scene on
The Fates. They were completely surreal characters, more `graphic' than
`character' animation. I figured that they were spirits, so they didn't
need bodies. They were just heads and hands (and one portable eyeball)
and the drapery suggested `bodies' underneath. I designed The Fates, and
The Old Theban, the Fat and Thin Women, and many other characters based
on drawings by Gerald Scarfe.

"[Scarfe] is a gentleman and a professional. For example, as he was
going to go back to England, [at the last minute] I said, `Hey, Gerald,
I forgot something! I need a bug!' I was doing this scene with these Thebans
standing around the well, and a cricket has to hop in, and I didn't have
a model for the cricket. He said, `Big eyes or small eyes?' I said, `I
think big eyes.' He did this funny little jelly bean of a cricket, with
giant eyes, that goes, `Cheep!' and frightens all the Thebans. I also did
the Painter in Herc's villa, who is, by the way, a caricature of Gerald
Scarfe! Gerald had sent his drawing for the character and [Ron and John]
said, `You know, this looks a lot like him.' I said, `Do you think he'll
get mad at me?' And, I don't know if he knows it now, that he's in there."

Nancy Beiman continues today at Walt Disney Feature Animation in Burbank,
but she wanted you all to know she's not the only girl anymore. "There
were many women animating on Hercules. Ellen Woodbury was the other Lead
Animator. She did Pegasus. Caroline Cruikshank, Teresa Wiseman, and Terri
Martin were all in the Phil[octetes] Unit. Catherine `Catpou' Poulain worked
on Meg[ara] in Paris. Gilda Kouros in the Hercules unit was our only Greek
animator [as well]. [There were three] female animators in the Effects
Department, and a number of Department Heads and Key assistants were also
women."

So different from the time nearly twenty years ago when Beiman stood alone
as the first woman to graduate from the CalArts Character Animation Program.
Luck (or The Fates) had an influence, but raw talent and hard work, combined
with a deep appreciation of a great tradition, tenacity and courage in
the face of adversity were there and needed as well.

Janet Benn was Scene Planner, Layout Checker and Retake Supervisor on
MTV Animation's Beavis and Butt-head Do America at MTV Animation
in New York. She has worked in animation production for 20 years, and was
an inker and final checker at Zander's Animation Parlour when Nancy Beiman
was animating there. She was also the first vice-president of Women in
Animation/New York, and has also officiated at ASIFA-East and Women Make
Movies, Inc.